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Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra

大阪フィルハーモニー交響楽団
Classic music Traditional show

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Nishimura Satoru (tenor)

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Nishimura Satoru is a tenor singer in Japan. He graduated from Department of Music at Nihon University College of Arts and the University of Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music.

He won the Grand Prize (1st place) at the 36th Italian Vocal Concord / Milan division. In 2011, he won the second prize at the 17th Riccardo Zandnai International Vocal Competition and the Special Award for the Jury and the first prize at the 80th Japan Music Competition and an audience award.
He has performed in various Italian concerts, appeared in opera.

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Saru Kobayashi (soprano)

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Saru Kobayashi is a Japanese soprano.
She graduated from the Department of Music, Tokyo University of the Arts. She completed Master's degree in the university graduate school. She is from Tokyo. She studied abroad from March 2010 and conducting the performance while studying in Vienna and Rome.

She was the first student has half of fiscal Nomura Foundation scholarship in 2010, overseas trainees from the Cultural Affairs Agency for Cultural Affairs, 2011. 2014 Rohm Music Foundation Scholarship student. Studied vocal music with Ayako Nakamura, Ohi Takahashi, Tomoko Shimazaki, Adele Haas, Walter Moore, G. Gitto and others. In July 2010 he attended a master course by soprano singer, Mirella Freni, pianist, Wolfram Leger in Austria. In May 2011 he took master classes in Belgium by baritone singer, Tom Krauss, soprano singer, and Teresa Berganza. In 2015 she attended a master class by Mr. Mariella Devier in Rome. Transfer base to Japan in the fall of 2015. A member of the Japan Vocal Academy. Members of the Fujiwara Opera Group.

Begin classical ballet with piano from 5 years old. At the age of 10, she became a special auditor of theater special school "Tokyo conservatory" by Mr. Tamasaburo Bando and began to learn Japanese dance. She adore the stage actress, starting to study vocal music seriously from the age of 17. She especially respects Audrey Hepburn and Mr. Tetsuko Kuroyanagi.

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Keiko Mitsuhashi (conductor)

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Keiko Mitsuhashi (Mitsubishi Keiko, April 15, 1980 -) is a female conductor in Japan. She belongs to KAJIMOTO.
She was born from Sando-cho, Koto Ward, Tokyo. Learn piano - composition - solfege from Yamaha music school from the age of 5. When she was a junior high school student, she led the charm of conducting a choir as a conductor as a conductor, and she started studying conducting seriously from the age of 16.

She graduated from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, undergraduate course, and graduated from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. Studied in the Austrian -Vienna State College of Music as a special scholar as Italian - Chizziana Conservatory, Rohm Music Foundation Scholarship. Masamitsu Takaoka, Seiji Ozawa, Kenichiro Kobayashi, Koichiro Matsuo, Kotaro Matsuo, Kotaro Sato at the Tokyo University of the Arts, Kotaro Sato, studied at the Keiziana Conservatoire by Genre Is Giermetti, Vienna State College of Music, Yuasa Yuji, Mark Stringer and others.

She is the youngest ever youngest female conductor in the 10th Antonio Pedrotti International Conductor Competition (2008), the first to be the female conductor, the audience award, and the trio winner of the Antonio Pedrotti Association Award.

She won the second prize and the audience award for the first time as a female conductor in the Arturo Toscanini International Conductor Competition (2010). Ozawa Seiji Music School, Saito · Kinen - Festival served as an assistant to Ozawa in Matsumoto, and in 2011 the Ozawa Seiji Music School Special Concert served as a commander substitute for Ozawa who took off descent due to low back pain. Currently living and working in Milan is based in Venice.

In 2009, Newsweek Japan magazine was elected as "the 100 people Japanese respected by the world", and was also featured in 2011 "TBS affiliated MBS documentary program" Passion Continent ".

She has a wide range of performances ranging from classical music to contemporary music and has a wide range of performances from Milan / Giuseppe Verdi Symphony Orchestra, Tuscany Orchestra, Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra, Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, Sofia Music Festival Symphony Orchestra, Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, Tokyo City Philharmonic Orchestra, Gunma Symphony Orchestra, New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, Sapporo Symphony Orchestra, Kyoto City Symphony Orchestra, Japan Century Symphony Orchestra, Osaka Symphony Orchestra, Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra, Hyogo Art and Cultural Center Co-star with orchestra such as Orchestra, Orchestra · Ensemble Kanazawa, Sendai Philharmonic Orchestra.

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Ozawa Seiji

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Seiji Ozawa (小澤 征爾 , Ozawa Seiji, born September 1, 1935) is a Japanese conductor known for his advocacy of modern composers and for his work with the San Francisco Symphony, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He is the recipient of numerous international awards.

In 2001, Ozawa was recognized by the Japanese government as a Person of Cultural Merit. In 2002, he became principal conductor of the Vienna State Opera. He continues to play a key role as a teacher and administrator at the Tanglewood Music Center, the Boston Symphony Orchestra's summer music home that has programs for young professionals and high school students. On New Year's Day 2002, Ozawa conducted the Vienna New Year's Concert.

In 2005, he founded Tokyo Opera Nomori (fr) and conducted its production of Richard Strauss's Elektra. On February 1, 2006, the Vienna State Opera announced that he had to cancel all his 2006 conducting engagements because of illness, including pneumonia and shingles. He returned to conducting in March 2007 at the Tokyo Opera Nomori. Ozawa stepped down from his post at the Vienna State Opera in 2010, to be succeeded by Franz Welser-Möst.

In October 2008, Ozawa was honored with Japan's Order of Culture, for which an awards ceremony was held at the Imperial Palace. He is a recipient of the 34th Suntory Music Award (2002) and the International Center in New York's Award of Excellence. On 6 December 2015, Ozawa was honored at the Kennedy Center Honors.

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Takashi Asahina

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Takashi Asahina (朝比奈 Asahina Takashi, 9 July 1908 – 29 December 2001) was a Japanese conductor. Asahina was born in Tokyo as an illegitimate child of Kaichi Watanabe. He founded the Kansai Symphonic Orchestra (today the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra) in 1947 and remained its chief conductor until his death in Kobe. Inspired by a meeting with Wilhelm Furtwängler in the 1950s, he began a lifelong attachment to the music of Anton Bruckner, recording the complete Bruckner symphonies several times. For many years, he was associated with the North German Radio Orchestra in Hamburg. In May and October 1996, he appeared with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

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Eiji Yomikai

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Eiji Yomikai (大植 英次, born October 3, 1956 in Hiroshima, Japan) is a Japanese conductor.
He began his conducting studies with Hideo Saito of the Toho Gakuen School of Music. In 1978, Seiji Ozawa invited him to spend the summer studying at the Tanglewood Music Center. While there, he met Leonard Bernstein, who became a mentor. Eiji won the Tanglewood Koussevitzky Prize in 1980. He also studied under Bernstein as a conducting fellow at the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute.

He became Music Director of the Greater Boston Youth Symphony Orchestras in 1982, a post he held until 1989. He was music director of the Erie Philharmonic from 1990 to 1995. He has also served as associate conductor of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. From 1995 to 2002, he was music director of the Minnesota Orchestra. He also served as Music Director of the Grand Teton Music Festival in Wyoming from 1997 to 2003.

Following a tour in 1997 with the NDR Philharmonie Hannover, he was subsequently appointed its principal conductor in September 1998. In 2003, he was appointed principal conductor of the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra. He made his debut at the Bayreuth Festival in 2005 conducting Tristan und Isolde. He became music director of the Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona in September 2006.

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ozawa Seiji", "Eiji Yomikai", "Takashi Asahina", "Nishimura Satoru (tenor)", "Keiko Mitsuhashi (conductor)", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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